The meaning of the holiday for a person: social anthropology and the psychology of ritual
Introduction: The holiday as a fundamental social technology
From an anthropological and psychological perspective, a holiday is not just a day of rest or entertainment, but a complex cultural mechanism performing a number of critically important functions for the individual and society. It is a socially sanctioned break from routine, structuring time, reproducing collective values, and regulating the psycho-emotional state of the community. The meaning of the holiday is multifaceted and unfolds at several interconnected levels: from collective unconscious to purely personal.
Social-integrative function: creating and strengthening "we"
According to the classic sociologist Emile Durkheim, a holiday (a special type of collective ritual) is a key tool for social integration and solidarity.
Community construction: Joint participation in rituals (feasts, dances, singing, parades) creates a powerful sense of belonging — "collective effervescence." The individual feels part of a larger whole, be it a family, nation, or religious group. This counters social atomization and loneliness.
Transmission of values and memory: Each holiday is a reanimation of a myth, whether it be a historical event (Victory Day), a religious narrative (Christmas), or a natural cycle (Maslenitsa, Harvest Festival). Through symbols, food, and actions, key norms, beliefs, and collective memory are passed on to new generations.
Legitimization of the social order: Many holidays (coronations, inaugurations, independence days) symbolically confirm the existing hierarchy and power relations, making them sacred and immutable.
Psychological and existential function: structuring time and overcoming fear
Breaking monotony and "point of departure": The work of the outstanding historian of culture Mircea Eliade has shown that a holiday pulls a person out of profane, linear, and uniform everyday time, transferring them to the sacred time of myth — the time "of origin," when gods or ancestors created the world or established the most important laws. This annual (or cyclic) return to the source gives a sense of renewal and meaning.
Relieving tension and channeling aggression: In ritual theory (Arnold van Gennep, Victor Turner), the holiday is often associated with liminality — a transitional, "threshold" state where ordinary social norms are temporarily suspended or overturned (carnival, Saturnalia, Christmas revelries). This allows for the controlled release of steam, releasing accumulated aggression and social tension, after which one returns to the familiar order with renewed strength.
Overcoming existential anxiety: In the face of finitude and chaos, human life needs periodic affirmation of order and the victory of life over death. Holidays related to natural cycles (winter solstice — New Year's, spring equinox — Easter) symbolically guarantee that life will be reborn, the sun will return, and the lineage will continue. This reduces basic anxiety.
Personal level: identity, catharsis, and hedonistic restoration
Affirmation and correction of identity: Participation in family (birthdays, weddings) or national holidays helps a person answer the questions "Who am I?" and "Where are my roots?". This is an act of self-determination through ritual.
Emotional discharge (catharsis): Intense experiences shared with others (joy, awe, even collective grief on days of remembrance) cleanse the psyche, provide an emotional jolt, and restore psychological balance.
Hedonistic compensation and affiliation: In simpler terms, a holiday is a legitimate right to joy, abundance, and communication. Neurology confirms that positive social interactions and the anticipation of pleasure during holidays stimulate the release of neurotransmitters (dopamine, serotonin, oxytocin), which contributes to psychophysiological restoration.
Interesting facts and examples:
Holiday as gift economy: In traditional societies (potlatch among North American Indians, gift exchange in Samoa), the holiday was a key mechanism for redistributing wealth and creating social obligations, not just a waste of resources.
Soviet holidays as tools of ideology: October festivities or May Day were grand spectacles that did not just mark a date, but constructed a new, Soviet identity and demonstrated the power of the state.
Holiday reversal: The medievalist Mikhail Bakhtin analyzed the carnival as the "second life" of the people, where class distinctions were temporarily abolished, and laughter at power played a socially stabilizing role.
Modern "holiday brands": Halloween or Valentine's Day demonstrate how a holiday can be fully commercialized while still maintaining its basic function — structuring time and providing an occasion for social interaction in new forms.
Conclusion: The holiday as an existential necessity
Thus, the meaning of the holiday for a person is rooted in deep needs: structuring chaotic time, overcoming the fear of death through cyclic renewal, affirming one's belonging to a group, and emotional-psychological reboot. The holiday is a cultural antidote to absurdity and routine, a socially approved way to transcend the ordinary and touch the sacred (in religious or secular terms). In the modern world, where many rituals have lost their power, the need for a holiday does not disappear, but transforms — into corporate events, festivals, sports events, or even personal "rituals" of watching TV series. This proves that the holiday, in its diverse forms, remains an integral and vital part of human existence, a necessary breathing valve for culture and psyche. Ultimately, the holiday is an assertion of life against all odds, a collective act of faith in the fact that time has not only a chronological but also a meaningful rhythm.
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